Mr Kissyfur wrote:
For setting the level of damages, yes, not for determining whether libel has occurred.
Well yes, that was my key point: the setting of damages (in a libel or defamation case) is
already an entirely subjective matter, itself in turn based on intangibles such as 'damage to reputation' and suchlike. One court would therefore doubtless give a different result from another, if presented with precisely the same information and outcome. The point here is that, inevitably, subjective judgement calls are already firmly ingrained into the system; it's not as though we always have the luxury of objective, measurable parameters/evidence, in all matters concerning the law anyway.
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Speeding is a terrible analogy, as is libel, for that matter, as libel is "saying something untrue about someone that damages their reputation", basically. If you can prove what you said is true, you're off scot free. No grey areas there.
My understanding of libel and defamation was that it's not only merely a case of saying something untrue that damages someone's reputation. You're the lawyer of course, not I, but this is what Wiki has to say about it (emphases are mine):
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Defamation—also called calumny, vilification, traducement, slander (for transitory statements), and libel (for written, broadcast, or otherwise published words)—is the communication of a statement that makes a claim, expressly stated or implied to be factual, that may give an individual, business, product, group, government, religion, or nation a negative or inferior image. This can be also any disparaging statement made by one person about another, which is communicated or published, whether true or false, depending on legal state
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DefamationSo, some grey area then?
In terms of the "group" being given "a negative or inferior image", to my mind there isn't too much of a leap to be made here in this particular example? The "group" are the surviving wounded War Veterans of whom the poppy specifically represents as a collective, most especially on Armistice Day. Burning said poppy, in this specific, derogatory and publicised manner, would seem to constitute and/or likely give rise to "a negative or inferior image"?
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There's clearly a world of difference between being careless, uncivil and even willfully offensive, and what this guy clearly premeditated, planned and went out and did.
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Yes, there is.
So, we're agreed then; if this distinction can reasonably and sensibly be made by the likes of you or I, it can certainly be made by an officer of the law, the CPS and/or a court (or jury for that matter). Good.
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But we've already seen with the "offensive messages by electronic communications" how this can be misused, or over applied. Even more so where the definition of the criminal offence concerned can cover everything from being just a bit offensive and what this guy did.
The fact that laws have been badly drawn up and/or badly applied (or indeed misapplied) does not in any way impinge upon the principle that there
should, in my view, be legal sanction for conduct such as this. Look, I'm arguing a broad principle here, I'm not attempting to formulate an entire legal framework/manifesto. It's perfectly valid for me to express this viewpoint in broad terms.
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I'm genuinely staggered that you think common sense comes anywhere near the idea of locking people up for being offensive.
Once again, I specifically did not say that. Legal sanction does not necessarily mean "locking people up" by default; that may be appropriate in extreme, repeat offender cases but equally, a £50 fine and/or community service may be appropriate.
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Well yes, quite, but in your brave new world if he ever got fed up all he'd have to do is say you'd offended him and off you go to gaol.
I'm sorry, but that's just ridiculous. I'm not talking about people merely *disagreeing* with each others' views here, as I would've thought obvious to be honest mate.